Al Capone and Diane Patricia Capone.Photo:Underwood Archives/Getty; Paul Kitagaki Jr./ZUMA Press Wire
Underwood Archives/Getty; Paul Kitagaki Jr./ZUMA Press Wire
Al Capone might be one of the most infamous figures in American history, but to his four grandchildren, he was simply “Papa.”
Despite the weight of their last name, they girls were shielded from much of the stigma associated with their family’s history. Their father and mother worked hard to ensure that their daughters could live a relatively normal life.
In an interview with theChicago Tribunein 2021,Diane said, “As children, there were times when people would ask questions that weren’t very nice or they would make derogatory remarks.”
The Capone sisters have opened up more about their family and Diane even authored multiple books about her life growing up with the notorious last name. Speaking to theChicago Tribunein 2021, Diane revealed her oldest sister, Veronica, had died “some years ago,” which she called “just devastating.”
Here’s everything to know about Al Capone’s four granddaughters, Diane, Barbara, Theresa and Veronica.
American gangster Al (Alphonse) Capone.Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty
Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty
She also emphasized that they had “very happy childhoods” thanks to their parents' efforts in raising them. Eventually, the family moved to Palo Alto, Calif. when Diane was a senior in high school.
The sisters were very young when Al passed away. Diane mentioned to theChicago Tribunethat she was only 3 years old at the time of his death on Jan. 25, 1947. Despite their tender ages, the sisters hold fond memories of their Papa.
This moment, she said, has stayed with her ever since. The sisters were deemed too young to attend his funeral, and they did not return to Chicago for a long time after his death.
Diane also spoke fondly about her grandfathertoABC7 Chicagoin 2022. “The man that I knew, was a very loving grandfather. And certainly a very loving father, my dad idolized his father,” she said at the time.
Al Capone with his son, Sonny, is displayed at Witherell’s auction house in Sacramento, California on October 4, 2021.Nick Otto / AFP via Getty
Nick Otto / AFP via Getty
Diane spoke about how their father was “incredibly loving” and how he passed on the affection he received in his own childhood to his daughters.
“Daddy just was incredibly loving. He showed what he had been raised with. He was adored and he passed it on to everybody he came in contact with,” she recalled to theChicago Tribune.
Their mother, Diana, met Sonny when they were just teenagers attending St. Pat’s Catholic School in Miami Beach.
“I think my mother always thought that Daddy would eventually join us, too, but it didn’t work out that way,” she said to the outlet. Despite the move, her father remained in Florida but frequently visited the family in California.
However, in 1986, following the deaths of his second wife and mother, Mae, Sonny moved to California permanently, where they spent the last nearly 20 years of his life together as a reunited family.
The Capone Girls book.The Troy Book Makers
The Troy Book Makers
Diane ventured into writing with her 2019 bookAl Capone: Stories My Grandmother Told Me. The book offers readers a personal glimpse into her family life, particularly focusing on the stories her grandmother shared about her grandfather.
She mentioned to theChicago Tribunethat she felt compelled to write this book as a response to the many inaccuracies she had encountered in various portrayals of her grandfather over the years.
“When I made the decision to try to write this book, it was in reaction or in response to all the things I’ve heard and read over the years that were grossly inaccurate about my grandparents,” she recalled.
Diane also published a follow-up book titledThe Capone Girls, which explores the lives of the Capone family after Al’s death, which was released in 2022.
Diane married shortly after graduating high school, she told theChicago Tribunein 2021, and had children while living in San Francisco.
After going through a divorce, she remarried, and as of 2021, had been with her current husband for over 35 years, living together in the Bay Area.
Diane Patricia Capone, granddaughter of the most notorious American gangster and infamous Alcatraz inmate, Al Capone, shares personal stories about him as a grandfather and selling family treasures on Monday, August 23, 2021.Paul Kitagaki Jr./ZUMA Press Wire
Paul Kitagaki Jr./ZUMA Press Wire
Diane and two of her sisters made the emotional decision in 2021 to auction off some of their grandfather’s belongings. The items, which had been in the family since the late 1920s, were initially housed at the Capone family’s Palm Island residence, Diane told theChicago Tribune. After Al’s death, their grandmother continued living in the house, keeping many of the rooms — including the master bedroom — unused. Over the years, the items were passed down to their father and eventually to the sisters.
As the sisters grew older and faced the realities of preserving these historical artifacts, they decided it was time to part with them, Diane explained to the outlet in 2021. Concerns about potential wildfires in Northern California, where they currently live, also influenced their difficult decision.
Diane revealed to theChicago Tribunethat although they had considered donating the items to a museum, the sisters ultimately felt that opening the auction to a broader audience was the best course of action.
source: people.com